The Magic of the Horse-shoe, with other folk-lore notes
Explore more books like this:
About This Book
The author collects and analyzes popular beliefs and customs surrounding amulets and omens, giving particular attention to the horse-shoe: its archaeological origins, historical methods of footwear for animals, regional practices such as hanging shoes over gates, and folk explanations for its protective power. Additional chapters survey beliefs about fortune and luck, the folk-lore of common salt, sneezing omens, auspicious and inauspicious days, superstitious treatment of animals, and the perceived favorability of odd numbers. The work combines historical evidence, regional anecdotes, and comparative interpretation to trace how practical objects and everyday occurrences became repositories of superstition.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
Sketches of Persia
by John Malcolm
Women artists in all ages and countries
by E. F. Ellet
Rand and the Micmacs
by Jeremiah S. Clark
Australian Search Party
by Charles H. Eden
Explorations in Australia / 1.-Explorations in search of Dr. Leichardt and party. 2.-From Perth to Adelaide, around the great Australian bight. 3.-From Champion Bay, across the desert to the telegraph and to Adelaide. With an appendix on the condition of Western Australia.
by Baron John Forrest Forrest
Arnold of Winkelried, the Hero of Sempach
by Gustav Höcker
